Kripke: Identity and Necessity I'm on page 15 out of 30. It's an easy read if you're aquatinted with Naming and Necessity, which you can find here:
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/4545/naming-and-necessity-reading-group
https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/4857/naming-and-necessity-lecture-three/p1
Some thoughts about terminology. Kripke introduces the term de re modality, which I think to newcomers can be confusing. Care to address this
@Banno?
Further, on around page 15, Kripke brings up the statement, that the the 37'th president of the United States is non-rigid and Nixon is rigid. This would sound confusing to someone at first. I can attempt answering this on the basis that one doesn't need to invoke their imagination too wildly and simply designate that there could be a possible world where Humphrey won the election, thus it is contingent. However within the reference frame of our world Nixon won the the 37 elections for the president of the United States, making him a rigid designator. It's important to note that the possibility of 37th election of the United States sets up the possibility that out (this is our criteria condition for identity) of two possible candidates one or the other won. So, following from this we can only reference who won based on the feature of the world obeying causality (Kripke relies on a causal theory of reference).
I'm not sure if this is a good place to start, so please let me know
@Banno.
Edit:
I would like to reiterate where people go on a wild goose chase, that counterfactuals like Nixon could have lost the binary relation of either winning or losing the presidency or winning it with respect to the causal chain of events
in our world,
not some other, and hence the status of Nixon being a rigid designator is assigned by our world not any other. That's just one instance where a counterfactual could have arisen given the epistemic criteria that fulfills the condition of him winning or losing the election. Treat everything else as et. cetera.
And, if it needs to be said in the positive that, yes, the causal chain of events would be the framing relation that allows Nixon to obtain as a rigid designator, in
our world.